Betty Zane by Zane Grey (best free novels TXT) ๐
Description
Betty Zane, published in 1903, was Zane Greyโs first novel. It tells the romanticized story of Greyโs great-great-aunt, who made a miraculous dash under fire to save a frontier fort from Indian attack.
Fort Henry sat on the site of present-day Wheeling, West Virginia. One of a series of fortifications built to protect frontier settlers, it was commanded by Colonel Ebenezer Zane, and was the center of a small community where Colonelโs brothers and his sister Betty lived. The fort survived two sieges by Native Americans, first in 1777 and again in 1782. In the 1782 siege the attacking tribes were joined by British soldiers; and it is this siege, and the events leading up to it, that are recounted in Betty Zane.
Grey claimed to derive the facts in his story from the personal notebook, preserved in his family, of his great-grandfather Ebenezer Zane, but itโs impossible for readers to distinguish historical fact, the supposed contents of the notebook, and the Greyโs own imagination. Certainly some aspects of the tale, like Bettyโs romantic involvements, are entirely fictionalized. But equally certainly, other major aspects of the tale, in particular Bettyโs heroism during the siege, come straight from the pages of history.
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- Author: Zane Grey
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โWere you going to shoot?โ asked Colonel Zane of Clarke.
โI took him for an Indian, but fortunately I discovered my mistake in time,โ answered Alfred.
โAre the Indians on the way here?โ asked Jonathan.
โThat I cannot say. At present the Wyandots are at home. But I know that the British and the Indians will make a combined attack on the settlements. It may be a month, or a year, but it is coming.โ
โAnd Hamilton, the hair buyer, the scalp buyer, is behind the plan,โ said Colonel Zane, in disgust.
โThe Indians have their wrongs. I sympathize with them in many ways. We have robbed them, broken faith with them, and have not lived up to the treaties. Pipe and Wingenund are particularly bitter toward the whites. I understand Cornplanter is also. He would give anything for Jonathanโs scalp, and I believe any of the tribes would give a hundred of their best warriors for โBlack Wind,โ as they call Lew Wetzel.โ
โHave you ever seen Red Fox?โ asked Jonathan, who was sitting near the fire and as usual saying but little. He was the wildest and most untamable of all the Zanes. Most of the time he spent in the woods, not so much to fight Indians, as Wetzel did, but for pure love of outdoor life. At home he was thoughtful and silent.
โYes, I have seen him,โ answered Isaac. โHe is a Shawnee chief and one of the fiercest warriors in that tribe of fighters. He was at Indian-head, which is the name of one of the Wyandot villages, when I visited there last, and he had two hundred of his best braves with him.โ
โHe is a bad Indian. Wetzel and I know him. He swore he would hang our scalps up in his wigwam,โ said Jonathan.
โWhat has he in particular against you?โ asked Colonel Zane. โOf course, Wetzel is the enemy of all Indians.โ
โSeveral years ago Wetzel and I were on a hunt down the river at the place called Girtyโs Point, where we fell in with the tracks of five Shawnees. I was for coming home, but Wetzel would not hear of it. We trailed the Indians and, coming up on them after dark, we tomahawked them. One of them got away crippled, but we could not follow him because we discovered that they had a white girl as captive, and one of the red devils, thinking we were a rescuing party, had tomahawked her. She was not quite dead. We did all we could to save her life. She died and we buried her on the spot. They were Red Foxโs braves and were on their way to his camp with the prisoner. A year or so afterwards I learned from a friendly Indian that the Shawnee chief had sworn to kill us. No doubt he will be a leader in the coming attack.โ
โWe are living in the midst of terrible times,โ remarked Colonel Zane. โIndeed, these are the times that try menโs souls, but I firmly believe the day is not far distant when the redmen will be driven far over the border.โ
โIs the Indian Princess pretty?โ asked Betty of Isaac.
โIndeed she is, Betty, almost as beautiful as you are,โ said Isaac. โShe is tall and very fair for an Indian. But I have something to tell about her more interesting than that. Since I have been with the Wyandots this last time I have discovered a little of the jealously guarded secret of Myeerahโs mother. When Tarhe and his band of Hurons lived in Canada their home was in the Muskoka Lakes region on the Moon river. The old warriors tell wonderful stories of the beauty of that country. Tarhe took captive some French travellers, among them a woman named La Durante. She had a beautiful little girl. The prisoners, except this little girl, were released. When she grew up Tarhe married her. Myeerah is her child. Once Tarhe took his wife to Detroit and she was seen there by an old Frenchman who went crazy over her and said she was his child. Tarhe never went to the white settlements again. So you see, Myeerah is from a great French family on her motherโs side, as this is old Frenchman was probably Chevalier La Durante, and Myeerahโs grandfather.โ
โI would love to see her, and yet I hate her. What an odd name she has,โ said Betty.
โIt is the Indian name for the white crane, a rare and beautiful bird. I never saw one. The name has been celebrated among the Hurons as long as any one of them can remember. The Indians call her the White Crane, or
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